Re: [RADIATOR] Radiator, WPA2, certificates and untrusted

2015-09-02 Thread A . L . M . Buxey
Hi, >Oh man! > >In other words it's a waste of good money to pay for a signed certificate. for your own internal 802.1X (where you are only directly authenticating your own users (and that includes eg eduroam) - yes. best practice is to use a self-signed CA (you have the same issues

Re: [RADIATOR] Radiator, WPA2, certificates and untrusted

2015-09-01 Thread Jesper Skou Jensen
il: Jesper Skou Jensen Cc: radiator@open.com.au Emne: Re: [RADIATOR] Radiator, WPA2, certificates and untrusted Hi Jesper, I think this is normal behavior. In eduroam we install the CA's root-certificate in the client/supplicant. (The 'eduroam CAT' crafted installer does so). The

Re: [RADIATOR] Radiator, WPA2, certificates and untrusted

2015-09-01 Thread Ole Frendved Hansen
Hi Jesper, I think this is normal behavior. In eduroam we install the CA’s root-certificate in the client/supplicant. (The 'eduroam CAT’ crafted installer does so). The clients certificate store is the responsibility of the browser (in a laptop). So, in a web context your server-certificate is

[RADIATOR] Radiator, WPA2, certificates and untrusted

2015-09-01 Thread Jesper Skou Jensen
Hello people, I'm in the process of renewing a certificate for our Radiator setup and I've run into a bit of problem. The problem is that I can't get clients to trust the WPA2 certificate when connecting to the network. Eg. Windows 7, an iPhone and probably other clients too. On the iOS I ke